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Costs and Consequences of Placing Children in Care

Costs and Consequences of Placing Children in Care

Jean Soper | Harriet Ward | Lisa Holmes | Richard Olsen

(2008)

Additional Information

Book Details

Abstract

It costs more to place a child in the care of a local authority than it does to send a child to a top boarding school, and there are substantial variations in costs both between and within authorities.

This book gets to the bottom of the costs of care and provides an insight into how these variations in cost relate to differences in children's needs, and most importantly, whether higher costs reflect better services and better outcomes for children.

Costs and Consequences for Children Placed Away from Home draws from new original research, and considers the implications for best practice and future policy. It also features information about a newly pioneered resource: a fully workable decision analysis model designed for use in local authorities which uses historical data for each child to calculate the probable cost consequences of difference placement choices.

This book sheds light on how to calculate the financial and social costs of care, and will be invaluable to both social work managers and policy makers working in children's services.


Harriet Ward is Director of the Centre for Child and Family Research and Senior Research Fellow at Loughborough University, UK. She has undertaken extensive research in the field of assessing need and evaluating outcomes in children's services. Lisa Holmes is a Research Associate at the Centre for Child and Family Research at Loughborough University, UK. Her research interests include the provision of support services for foster carers, costs of foster care, and youth justice. Jean Soper is based at Leicester University, UK.

Table of Contents

Section Title Page Action Price
Intensive farming techniques reduce quality and degrade the land
No alternatives: declining commodities and the failure of rural development
Lack of alternatives to coffee as a cash crop
Depending on declining commodities
Too little value captured
Failure to deliver on rural development
Inadequate regulation
Farmers' and workers' organisation under attack
Scarce information
Too little training and support
Bad loans, no new credit
Weak rural infastructure
Declining aid and double standards: farmers betrayed by the donors
3. Niche markets - an escape route? Not for all
Fair Trade: a glimmer of hope
Specialty brands capturing high value
Running for the same exit?
No grounds for inertia
4.Getting out of crisis: a strategy for action
Restore the balance of supply and demand
Restore quality and raise productivity
Raise prices, revive livelihoods
Retain and build value-adding capacity
Establish real alternatives for rural development
Conclusion
Recommendations: A Coffee Rescue Plan
Notes
Background research
Oxfam's work with coffee producers
Oxfam International contact details.